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Building Information Modeling: Autodesk Building Industry Solutions
Building Information Modeling: Autodesk Building Industry Solutions
White Paper
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Building Information Modeling
and generating schedules. Forward-thinking design firms adopted these tools, realizing that
the data in the object-oriented CAD files, if carefully structured and managed, could be used
to automate certain documentation tasks like schedules and room numbering.
A parallel development in the 1990s was the increasing use of the Internet for sharing data
digitally. Suddenly information could not be effectively communicated unless it was
represented digitally. CAD files that had been exchanged on floppy disks within the design
team appeared instead on Internet FTP sites, on web pages, and attached to emails. The
same forward-thinking design firms who were adopting object-oriented CAD into their
practices began sharing and delivering their documents to clients digitally and began
investigating web-based project management and collaboration services.
But object-oriented CAD systems remain rooted to building graphics, built on graphics-
based CAD foundations, and as a result are not fully optimized for creating and managing
information about a building. Other industries, such as Manufacturing, have realized great
benefit from nongraphical, parametric information technology tools. Another generation of
software solutions, designed with current technology and purpose-built, is required to fully
realize the benefits information technology can bring to the building industry. This next
generation of information-centric software provides building information modeling in place
of building graphic modeling.
By storing and managing building information as databases, building information modeling
solutions can capture, manage, and present data in ways that are appropriate for the
building team member using that data. Because the information is stored as a database,
changes in that data that so frequently occur during design can be logically propagated and
managed by the software throughout the project life cycle.
Building information modeling solutions add the management of relationships between
building components beyond the object-level information in object-oriented CAD solutions.
This allows information about design intent to be captured in the design process. The
building information model contains not only a list of building components and locations but
also the relationships that are intended between those objects. For example, that a door
should be 3 feet from a window or the eaves of the roof should overhang the exterior wall
by 550 mm. Or that three beams should be spaced equally across a structural bay or that
the slope of an excavation should be maintained at a certain angle. These relationships,
implicitly understood by the designer, become explicit when the building is described in a
building information modeler.
Further, these relationships can be inferred by the building information modeler as the user
works, or explicitly entered as work progresses. These relationships then allow for changes
to the building information model to be managed by the software consistent with the design
principles and intent for the project. The richness of the relationships embedded within
building components themselves, as well as those embedded in the overall model, makes
reuse of the data in other applications even more powerful and the design process
significantly more efficient.
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Building Information Modeling
Digital Databases
Building information modeling solutions create and operate on digital databases for
collaboration. The building industry has traditionally illustrated building projects through
drawings and added information over those illustrations via notes and specifications. CAD
technology automated that process, and object-oriented CAD extended the idea of adding
information to illustrations and graphics into software. The result of earlier manual drafting,
graphics CAD systems, and object-oriented CAD systems were identical: the creation of
graphic abstractions of the intended building design.
The principles of building information modeling turn this relationship around. Building
information modeling applications start with the idea of capturing and managing information
about the building, and then present that information back as conventional illustrations or in
any other appropriate way. A building information model captures building information at
the moment of creation, stores and manages it in a building information database, and
makes it available for use and reuse at every other point in the project. Drawings become a
view into the database that describes the building itself.
In a building information modeler, the building information is stored in a database instead of
in a format (such as a drawing file or spreadsheet) predicated on a presentation format. The
building information modeler then presents information from the database for editing and
review in presentation formats that are appropriate and customary for the particular user.
Architects, for example, work on the information using the conventions of the highly stylized
symbolic graphic language of building design (such as plan, section, and elevation), entering
and reviewing information in a format that looks just like the architectural drawings they
have worked with for years. They work on the building information through a drawing rather
than working directly on a drawing in the computer. Similarly, structural engineers work
with the data presented graphically in familiar framing and bracing diagrams, quite different
from the architects’ interface to the data. Builders work with some of these same
presentations and also isometric views of the building geometry to study phasing and
coordination issues and databases or spreadsheets of quantity data provided from the
building information model.
Although each professional working on the building project views the building information in
the way he or she expect to see it, these presentations of the information—drawings,
schedules, cost estimates, other conventional presentations of the building information—are
all views into the same information model. While each discipline interacts with familiar and
customary views of the information, the building information modeler assures that changes
made in any of these views is reflected in all other presentations.
Building information models organize collaboration by the building team through digital
databases. The building information model can be distributed to individual team members
working on a network or sharing files through project collaboration tools such as the
Autodesk® Buzzsaw™ service. Team members work independently on local data sets while
the building information modeling solution manages changes to the model from each of
these local databases in a central shared location. Team members can compare their work
to concurrent work by other team members and dynamically reserve and release portions of
the database for use over the network. A record of these interactions—who changed what,
and when—is available for review, and a history of all changes made by all team members
can be preserved in the building information model for as long as this information is useful.
Changes can be selectively rolled back to support investigations of options or changes in
design direction.
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Building Information Modeling
Change Management
Building information modeling solutions manage iterative change through a building’s
design, construction, and operation. A change to any part of the database is coordinated in
all other parts.
The process of building design and documentation is iterative. The understanding of a
design problem develops during the design process. In addition to the refinements typical to
any design process, a new insight into the design problem may lead the design team to
discover that the solution could be quite different, and possibly better. At that point another
iteration occurs that may reconsider earlier assumptions. Managing this iterative change is
an inherent part of the design process. Technology tools and work processes that do not
allow the design to be refined and reconsidered in an iterative way as the project develops
discourage the best possible solutions to the design problem. Building information modeling
solutions, because of the management of relationships within the data and change to that
data, are ideal for this approach. And using building information modeling tools results in
the highest quality project for the owner and the best possible work by the team.
Maintaining an internally consistent representation of the building as a database improves
drawing coordination and reduces errors in the documents to the benefit of all building team
members. Time that would otherwise be spent in manual document checking and
coordination can be invested instead in the real work of making the building project better.
The resulting documents are of higher quality, and thus the costs of changes and
coordination are reduced. Building information modeling tools enable the design,
construction, and occupancy of the building to proceed with less friction and fewer
difficulties than conventional tools.
Estimating, procurement, and construction are also iterative processes of definition and
elaboration. Specific materials and products are selected from among the range of
possibilities that meet the project specification. Selection, refinements, and substitutions
may result in changes to some aspects of the design. Ambiguities in the design documents
are resolved between the design and construction teams before construction. The
construction and design teams consider changes to improve constructability and value for
the client. Each of these decisions requires evaluation and that new information be captured
to support later evaluations as well as operation and management of the building. Building
information modeling solutions capture and manage this information and make it available
to support the collaborative process.
The operation of buildings after completion is also an iterative process that is well supported
by building information modeling solutions. The first occupancy of a building—the end of the
conventional design and construction cycle—is just the beginning of the life and use of the
structure. The evolving occupancy of the building together with the maintenance
requirements of the building materials, assemblies, and systems result in changes
throughout the life of the building. Building information modeling supports the building life
cycle with solutions for the design and documentation of the continuing maintenance,
renovation, and renewal of the building itself within the building information model. For
example, information about all the successive renovations to a building can be maintained
in the building information model, forming a record of all changes that have been made to
the building in its history.
Reuse of Information
Building information modeling solutions capture and preserve information for reuse by
additional industry-specific applications. Successful information technology solutions outside
the building industry are based on one primary principle: Data is captured once, as close to
its point of origin as possible, and stored in a way that it is always easily available and can
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Building Information Modeling
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Building Information Modeling
architectural problems to the design team by minimizing coordination time and manual
checking. By sharing common building information modeling tools, more experienced team
members work together concurrently with the production members of the project team
through all phases of the project, providing close control over technical and detailed
decisions about the execution of the design. In construction the consequences of proposed
or procured products can be studied and understood easily. The builder can quickly and
easily prepare plans showing site utilization or renovation phasing for the owner,
communicating and minimizing the impact of construction operations on the owner’s
operations and personnel. The building owner uses building information models to improve
quality in the management of the building. The building information model provides a digital
record of building renovations and improves move planning and management.
Greater Speed
With building information modeling solutions the design and documentation of the building
can be done concurrently instead of serially. Design thinking is captured at the point of
creation and embedded in the documentation as the work proceeds. All deliverables for the
design team—schedules, color-filled diagrams, drawings—are created dynamically while the
design work is being done. When a change is made, all the consequences of that change are
automatically coordinated through the project. All of this allows the design team to deliver
better work faster. The production of key project deliverables, like visualizations and
regulatory approval documents, requires less time and effort by the design team, so the
project can move ahead faster. In construction the builder can use the building information
model (or create one) to accelerate the quantification of the building for estimating and
value engineering purposes. This same model is then reused for revised estimates and
construction planning. Building information modeling accelerates the adaptation of standard
building prototypes to site conditions for businesses such as retail that require similar
buildings in many different locations.
Lower Cost
Using building information modeling, design teams get more work done with fewer people. A
smaller design team means lower costs and less chance for miscommunication. Because the
documents are coordinated by the computer and therefore can be more complete, the cost
of changes and coordination in construction administration is reduced.
Floor area-based (square-foot) budgeting and cost estimating are easier with a building
information model, and cost information is available earlier and can be updated more
frequently than with conventional tools. Changes late in the design process to reduce
construction costs are difficult, inefficient, and expensive for the design team. With better
cost information available from a building information model these kinds of changes are less
likely.
In construction, less time and money are spent in process and administration because
document quality is higher and construction planning is better. More of the owner’s
construction dollar goes into the building instead of administration and overhead in design
and construction. The building information model is also used to access and manage
physical information about the building such as finishes, tenant or department assignments,
and furniture and equipment inventory, as well as financially important data regarding
leasable areas and rental income or departmental cost allocations. Access to this
information improves both revenue and cost management in the operation of the building.
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Building Information Modeling
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San Rafael, CA 94903
USA
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